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Switch Hitters: How League Involvement In Daily Fantasy Sports Could End The Prohibition Of Sports Gambling, Jordan Meddy Jan 2016

Switch Hitters: How League Involvement In Daily Fantasy Sports Could End The Prohibition Of Sports Gambling, Jordan Meddy

Brooklyn Journal of Corporate, Financial & Commercial Law

Whether in the form of lotto tickets or casino table games, gambling is legally permitted in some way in virtually every U.S. state. Yet, in all but a handful of jurisdictions, federal law prohibits wagering on sporting events or professional athletes in any form. Several economically challenged states, particularly New Jersey, have been trying to authorize sports gambling within their borders as a way to raise tax revenues and support their local gambling industries. While these attempts have thus far been unsuccessful, Daily Fantasy Sports have simultaneously experienced a meteoric rise, becoming a multi-billion dollar industry. This Note examines the …


The Commercial Litigator’S Bible - Fourth Edition: A Review Of The Fourth Edition Of Commercial Litigation In New York State Courts, Hon. Ira B. Warshawsky Jan 2016

The Commercial Litigator’S Bible - Fourth Edition: A Review Of The Fourth Edition Of Commercial Litigation In New York State Courts, Hon. Ira B. Warshawsky

Touro Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Export Trade Note: A New Instrument For International Trade, Eugene A. Ludwig, Michael J. Coursey Jan 2015

The Export Trade Note: A New Instrument For International Trade, Eugene A. Ludwig, Michael J. Coursey

Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law

No abstract provided.


Charging The Jury On Damages In Personal-Injury Cases: How New York Can Benefit From The English Practice, Charles D. Cole Jr Jan 2004

Charging The Jury On Damages In Personal-Injury Cases: How New York Can Benefit From The English Practice, Charles D. Cole Jr

Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce

The trial of a personal-injury case to a jury is fraught with uncertainty. Uncertainty stems from whether the plaintiff will prevail (and whether the jury will find the defendant at fault) and the amount of damages. Personal injuries, such as a broken ankle or a busted knee, do not translate well into specific dollar awards. Awarding a sum of money for a personal injury is firmly rooted in the law and is the only means available to compensate the plaintiff for a loss. These means are entrusted to the jury beginning at jury selection and continuing throughout the trial. trial …


Father Knows Best: Revised Article 8 And The Individual Investor, Francis J. Facciolo Apr 2000

Father Knows Best: Revised Article 8 And The Individual Investor, Francis J. Facciolo

Florida State University Law Review

No abstract provided.


The New York Truth In Travel Act, Lisa Kennedy Jan 1975

The New York Truth In Travel Act, Lisa Kennedy

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

A New York couple arrange a vacation abroad through their travel agent. They expect a direct flight, deluxe, centrally located accommodations, and guided tours of local attractions. Once they have set out, they discover to their dismay that their flight makes several lengthy stops, their reservations are at a drab and uncomfortable hotel in an inconvenient location, and there are no reservations for the tours. This hypothetical situation is representative of instances of travel fraud, a frequent consumer grievance in what is acknowledged as the considerable volume of travel business being conducted in the United States. New York has attempted …


New York Specious Cash Sales Act, Craig D. Holleman Jan 1971

New York Specious Cash Sales Act, Craig D. Holleman

University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform

The New York Legislature recently moved to protect consumers in that state from unscrupulous retailers of consumer goods and financers of consumer loans by enacting the Specious Cash Sales Act. The new law is the third in a series of measures designed to remedy certain perceived inequities to which the holder in due course doctrine gives rise in the consumer goods field. Earlier this year, the Legislature undercut complicated mechanisms whereby a finance company could procure from a retailer contracts and obligations containing a waiver-of-defenses provision executed by the buyer-consumer. This law in turn complemented a still earlier statute which …


The Corporate Mortgage Under Article 9 Of The Uniform Commercial Code And The New York Solution, George C. Coggins Apr 1965

The Corporate Mortgage Under Article 9 Of The Uniform Commercial Code And The New York Solution, George C. Coggins

Michigan Law Review

A corporate mortgage has been defined as "an indenture intended to convey property, real and personal, tangible and intangible, to a trustee for bondholders, as security for the bonds issued and to be issued thereunder" by a corporation. This financing device, utilized by many large corporate organizations, has grown to be of paramount importance in the field of corporate financing, and the lack of attention given by the Code to the long-term debts of corporations has raised serious questions of filing procedures. Discussion of the novel treatment accorded by New York to the problem of perfecting security interests in corporate …


Process-Obtaining Personal Jurisdiction Over Foreign Corporation By Service Of Process On Local Sales Agent, F. William Hutchinson S.Ed. Jun 1948

Process-Obtaining Personal Jurisdiction Over Foreign Corporation By Service Of Process On Local Sales Agent, F. William Hutchinson S.Ed.

Michigan Law Review

Defendant, a Texas manufacturing corporation, employed a corporate agent to solicit orders in New York. The agent maintained a showroom, used defendant's name on its office door and stationery, and paid all the expenses of the New York business out of sales commissions. All orders were subject, to acceptance by the defendant and were filled from Texas. In an action for trade-mark infringement brought in the New York state court and removed to the federal district court, service of summons and complaint was made upon the manager of the New York agency. The district court quashed the service and dismissed …


Constitutional Law - Validity Of State Use Tax On Mail Order Sales Of Foreign Corporation, Michigan Law Review Apr 1941

Constitutional Law - Validity Of State Use Tax On Mail Order Sales Of Foreign Corporation, Michigan Law Review

Michigan Law Review

The respondent, a New York corporation licensed to do retail business in Iowa, did a large mail order business there also. Iowa customers sent orders by mail to the company's warehouses located outside that state, and the merchandise was shipped directly to the purchaser. On these mail order sales the company neither collected from its customers, nor paid to the state, the Iowa use tax. The petitioner, chairman of the state tax commission, threatened to cancel the respondent's license as a retailer and its permit to do business in Iowa unless such use tax were paid. Respondent obtained an injunction …


Interstate Commerce - Discrimination Between Shippers By Providing Non-Transportation Services At Less Than Cost, Thomas K. Fisher Apr 1939

Interstate Commerce - Discrimination Between Shippers By Providing Non-Transportation Services At Less Than Cost, Thomas K. Fisher

Michigan Law Review

In order to increase the use of rail transportation, seven railroads with terminals at the Port of New York expended a total of $35,000,000 in construction of warehouse and docking facilities. Charges for leases, storage (both in and out of the transit privilege), handling and insurance were found by the Interstate Commerce Commission to be non-compensatory. The commission further found that the below-cost warehouse rates were not available to all shippers alike. Upon an appeal by the carriers from a three-judge court's dismissal of their petition to enjoin enforcement of a cease and desist order issued by the commission, it …


Sales-Corporate Reorganization Proceedings Under Section 77b-Right Of Conditional Vendors To Reclaim Property Feb 1936

Sales-Corporate Reorganization Proceedings Under Section 77b-Right Of Conditional Vendors To Reclaim Property

Michigan Law Review

The debtor, a laundry corporation, had filed a petition for reorganization under Section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act. The petition was granted, but prior to the approval by the court of a reorganization plan several conditional vendors (whose sales agreements had been filed according to the requirement of the New York law) moved to retake the articles sold, in accordance with said law relative to conditional sales, the debtor having defaulted in the agreed payments. Held, the conditional vendors were not lienors nor mortgagees, whose interests would have been covered by the reorganization petition; and since the chattels were …


Sales-Conditional Sales-Resale By Seller Jan 1931

Sales-Conditional Sales-Resale By Seller

Michigan Law Review

Plaintiff bought fourteen cabs from defendant on a conditional sate contract, and after paying more than fifty per cent of the purchase price defaulted in his payments. Defendant then retook possession of the cabs and undertook to foreclose plaintiff's interest therein by a resale at public auction, as required by the Uniform Conditional Sales Act, in force in the jurisdiction. The specific requirements of the Act relative to notice of the sale were complied with, but the notices did not state where the cabs were being kept, and at the time of the sale they were in a garage miles …